us. vm. AUG. 23, i9i3.] NOTES AND QUERIES.
157
copy, which were given to Gray by Mason,
Lord Delamere, and others. This is one :
" Stuffing for Veal and Calves Heart. Take a pickled herring, skin, bone and wash it in several waters, chop small with half a quarter of a pound of suet, some bread grated fine, parsley cut small, a little thyme, nutmeg, and pepper to your taste. Mix it with two eggs. (N.B. Tried and found T)ad.) "
Thomas Pelham -Holies, Duke of Newcastle 1693-1768, lived at Stanmer, near Lewes, where St. Clouet had the post of chef. Was Verral originally employed in the same house- hold, afterwards becoming proprietor of The White Hart" at Lewes? The fame of the Duke of Newcastle's banquets and hospitality survives in the neighbourhood to this day. A. L. HUMPHBEYS.
187, Piccadilly, W.
' OUR NATIONAL STATICS ' : ' THE SATUR- DAY MAGAZINE' (11 S. viii. 109). The series of articles on ' Our National Statues ' commenced in the second volume of The Saturday Magazine, p. 146, being the issue for 20 April, 1833. This number gives a lull -page illustration of the ' Statue of Charles the First, at Charing Cross,' on p. 145, the front cover of the issue. Pp. 194- 195 of the same volume describe the ' Statue of Charles the Second, at Chelsea,' and p. 193, the front page of the issue for 25 May, 1833, illustrates it. Sir Thomas Gresham's monu- ment was described and illustrated in the issue for 15 June. 1833, vol. ii. pp. 225-7. The fourth contribution, describing and illus- trating the ' Statue of King James the Second, at Whitehall,' appeared in the issue for 12 Oct., 1833, vol. iii. pp. 137-9. The fifth, dealing in the same way with the ' Statue of King William the Third, in St. James's Square, London,' appeared 29 March, 1834, vol. iv. pp. 1 13-14 ; and the ' Bronze Statue of the Duke of York, in Carlton Gardens,' was described and illustrated in the same volume, pp. 177-8, the issue being for 10 May, 1834. The seventh contribution dealt with the
- Statue of Thomas Guy, in the Chapel of
Guy's Hospital,' and appeared 2 Aug., 1834, vol. v. pp. 41-3. THOMAS W. HUCK.
Saffron Walden.
Articles on the following statues, with full - page illustrations, appeared in The Saturday Magazine :
1. King Charles I. (by Le Sueur) at Charing Cioss. No. 51, 20 April, 1833, p. 145.
2. King Charles II. (by Grinling Gibbons) at helsea. No. 57, 25 May, 1833, p. 193.
3. Sir Thomas Gresham (by Gabriel Cibber) at the !{>yal Kxchange. No. 61, 15 June, 1833, IP/225.
4. King James II. (by Grinling Gibbons) at
Whitehall. No. 82, 12 Oct., 1833, p. 137.
5. King William III. (by J. Bacon, jun.) in St. James's Square. No. Ill, 29 March, 1834, p. 112.
6. H.R.H. the Duke of York (by E. Westma- cott) in Carlton Gardens. No. 119, 10 May, 1834, p. 177.
7. Thomas Guy (by J. Bacon, sen.) in the Chapel of Guy's Hospital. No. 134, 2 Aug., 1834, p. 41.
7*. Sir Isaac Newton (by L. F. Roubiliac) at Trinity College, Cambridge. No. 223, 26 Dec., 1835, p. 241.
8. George Fredk. Handel (by L. F. Roubiliac) in Westminster Abbey. No. 332, 2 Sept., 1837,
P- 89 ' W. J. M.
The first number of the magazine is dated 7 July, 1832. No article on the national statues appears during that year, but in 1833 the following appeared [ut supra}.
At the end of the article of 12 Oct. on James II. at Whitehall there is an allusion to " a noble head of James the First, larger than life, which was originally placed over the entrance to Whitehall, but is now in Windsor Castle,"
and is said to be one of Gibbons' s " best works in bronze." CHARLES MADELEY. Warringtori.
[E. B. also thanked for reply ]
WOODEN NUTCRACKERS (11 S. viii. 89). P. D. M.'s nutcrackers are almost certainly Swiss. Their kind was abundant in Swiss shops in the sixties of the last century, and for all I know are still to be found there, but I have not been in Switzerland lately. They were more pretty than convenient.
JOHN R. MAGRATH. [MR. HARRY HEMS also thanked for reply.]
HUMBUG (11 S. viii. 49, 115). To the replies quoted may be added the following amusing work, which is probably the best known on the subject :
Reach (Angus B.), Natural History of Humbugs. Profusely illustrated. 1847. 16mo.
Papers have also been given on Dickens's studies of humbugs, but I am unable to say if they are in print in The Dickensian or elsewhere. WM. JAGGARD.
Rose Bank, Stratford-on- A\ on.
" ANAPHYLAXIS " (11 S. viii. 85). The term " anaphylaxis " scarcely denotes insomnia, as MR. H. KREBS suggests. The word was coined by Richet in 1902, and means a sensitiveness of the system to receive certain poisons, in contradistinction to "prophylaxis." The one word means a proneness to, the other a protective against, certain morbid influences.
M.D.